Jimenez is coming off a bounce-back season, posting a 3.30 ERA and 194/80 K/BB ratio in 182.2 innings during his second full season in Cleveland. But the righthander has been one of the most frustrating pitchers in fantasy baseball, as evidenced by his erratic ERAs in the three seasons prior: 2.88 in 2010 with Colorado, 4.68 in 2011 between the Rockies and Indians, and a career-high 5.40 ERA in '12.

The main culprit for Jimenez's inconsistencies has been poor control. He has a career 4.0 BB/9 and was able to work around a 3.9 BB/9 last year thanks in part to a revived 9.6 K/9. Until that goes away -- Jimenez is already 30, so by now he is who he is -- Jimenez will never be fully trustworthy in fantasy leagues.

There's also the move from Progressive Field, generally neutral for pitchers, to the homer-happy Camden Yards, which led the league with 232 jacks last year and ranks as the third-most hitter-friendly park in our 2014 ballpark projections. Plus, the AL East is full of hitter's parks and powerful lineups. Although Jimenez never really struggled with homers even in Colorado, it's still not an ideal situation.

Jimenez might be able to rack up Ks again -- no guarantee since his velocity has decreased for four straight seasons -- but don't count on him to keep his ERA or WHIP in check.

Jimenez joins a suddenly crowded rotation in Baltimore, which could affect sleeper plans for fantasy owners. We're projecting the new-look rotation to include Jimenez, Chris Tillman, Wei-Yen Chen, Miguel Gonzalez and Bud Norris, but newcomer Suk-min Yoon and sleeper Kevin Gausman could also be in the mix. It would be a shame for fantasy owners if Gausman gets bumped from the rotation, but he and/or Yoon could become deep saves sleepers in an unsettled bullpen.